Ryan Bingham & band @ Whelans 9th Nov 2012

 

Having a new album to tour brings Ryan Bingham back to Dublin for a sold out show in Whelans. With his new three-piece band he has lost of none of the dynamics and overdrive that has been such a part and parcel of his live oeuvre.

The timbre of his voice is still one of a much older person, with a lifetime of experience. Yet Bingham is still young and draws his wry observations of a world he has encountered, first or second-hand, as he travels and performs. His fourteen song set included a selection of songs taken from all his four albums as he seems to discount a low key, independent debut.

From the current album, Tomorrowland, he naturally played a large selection which included Western Shore, Flower Bomb, Never Far Behind, Guess Who's Knocking and Too Deep To Fill. Earlier albums were represented by Dylan's Hard Rain, Southside of Heaven, Sunrise, Sunshine and Tell My Mother I Miss Her So. These were delivered with a variety of electric guitars that included a couple of Telecasters, a Gibson SG and a Les Paul as well as a host of effects pedals.

For a large part of the set Ryan led the sound on twelve and six string acoustic guitars. The latter lost a string mid-set, though he carried on playing with the offending string hanging loose, much like the band, who backed Bingham with a sense of accomplished abandon. Drummer Matt Sherrod, who played on the new album, with bassist Kelly Sherrod  provided a solid rhythmic foundation for Bingham and guitarist Evan Weatherford to weave a rough but colourful cloth of hard guitars that was more rock than roots, although several songs were delivered in a subtler context.

The first two encores showed that Ryan Bingham is a very capable solo performer with his versions of Hallelujah and The Weary Kind, an obvious audience favourite which wasn't on the original set list and had not been included in the set on his last visit. The final encore song was a duel between both guitarists using glass slides for a climaxing and mesmerizing Bread and Water that left the mixed age audience well satisfied with their night out. 

Review by Stephen Rapid. Photography by Ronnie Norton

Ed Romanoff & Band @ Whelans Oct 23rd 2012

With his debut album being one of the year’s best, it was interesting to see how Ed Romanoff would deliver his songs live. Although his first Dublin performance was sparsely attended, the show delivered and was engaging and entertaining. Romanoff proved to be a natural performer,  both of his songs and with his introductions. He has a charismatic warmth that immediately has the audience on his side, and you know that the next time he comes the audience will be bigger as the word spreads.

Unusually for a first visit Romanoff brought a full band with him. They brought much to the overall delivery of the songs, adding depth and texture and bolstering Romanoff's vocal prowess. For a man who only started writing songs in the last few years, he has a talent that many would envy. The band was led by guitarist John Putnam whose Telecaster leads lines were effective and engaging. Benjamin Champoux provided subtle percussion and Dublin based Kim Porcelli added much with her cello and backing vocals. For three numbers Romanoff brought up local singer Sharon Murphy, whom he had spotted busking on Grafton Street, and invited her to join him for the show.

The songs were mostly from his eponymous debut, including his take on the Hank Cochran/Harlan Howard classic I Fall To Pieces, which takes thefamiliar lyric to darker places. His own songs include his tale of being abandoned by a girlfriend in Ireland on July 4th (Breakfast For One on the 5th of July), his discovery that his Russian parents had adopted him and that on taking a DNA test he had discovered that he was 50% Irish and related to Niall of the Nine Hostages, or as he said "nine sausages" which brought laugher all round (St. Vincent de Paul). There was a humourous element to the evening even though most of the songs tend to hale from the darker side of life. 

Other songs included Potholes, Curveball and I Must Have Done Something Right. Two Yellow Roses was written, he told us, from the perspective of a guy who has lost everything. When You're Dreaming was written with his former flat mate Josh Ritter. Many of the other songs had been written with the album's producer Crit Harmon. All are good songs and well worth hearing. He closed the show with a solo acoustic rendition of Sacred Wreck which showed that even without his worthy band, Ed Romanoff can put across a song with feeling. One new song was titled I'm A little Less Broken Now and was inspired by a comment of a colleague who had gone through surgery. When he went to see her he was afraid to give her a hug in case it would hurt her and she said that she was ‘a  little less broken’.

Romanoff will be back soon, as he felt very much at home here. Make sure you get along next time as it is a powerful, yet enjoyable evening out.

Review by Stephen Averill. Photography by Ronnie Norton

 

Justin Townes Earle @ Whelans - Wed. 5th September 2012

Tall, bespectacled and full of pent up energy,  Justin Townes Earle walks onto Whelans’ stag and asks how everyone’s doing. He begins his first song, Memphis In The Rain, from his current album Nothing’s Going To Change The Way You Feel about Me Now. From that album he also included the title song and Maria amongst others. In fact he plays songs from most of his albums but nothing I recognize from his debut. Earle says that when he made that album all he wanted to do was play honky-tonk music, but he soon realized that  what was called “country music” had nothing to do with what he liked or wanted to play. That when 12 bar had been taken out of country music and country  had lost its way. 12 bar and the blues are still fundamental to Earle’s music live.

His songs are rooted in restlessness and the travails of traveling. This was highlighted by titles like Movin’ On, One More Night in Brooklyn and Wanderin’. The latter he prefaced by an intro that explained that Woody Guthrie “talked the way we talk and wrote the way we talk” so his songs are straight forward and have a universality which is missing from most of the current crop of singer/songwriters. Earle’s songs are rooted in his own experience with They Killed John Henry, a tribute to his grandfather. Mama’s Eyes was dedicated to his mother “she’s my hero” he told us, saying  that she wore cut-off shorts and lived her live and that “no-one fucked me up, I’m just fucked up”. He is intense and insightful, prefacing his song with some well chosen words. He saved some of those for a section of the audience who sang along with the choruses of several song. He thanked them for the participation, but told them they sounded like a bunch of drunken pirates  and would they ever “fuck off”. Likewise he asked those who decided to clap along to stop as it was messing with his head. (and therefore his timing) — not that there wasn't humour and self-deprecation involved too in both song and in the introductions. He wasn't acting all high and mighty, rather he wanted to put on the show the way he wanted to without unnecessary interference.

He also played, as well as his own strong songs, a number of covers including one he had learned from his Dad called variously Cadillac Blues and Big Car Blues. This again emphasized his own effective rhythmic guitar style, which if there was any criticism of the evening, mentioned by some, was that the tempo and delivery was a little repetitive over a long set. But that was not a view held by the majority of  this younger than usual audience who took Earle to their collective hearts. He had just finished playing dates in the UK with  his band and hoped that he could return with them soon. That should be something special for both sides of the stage

Dave Alvin & The Guilty Ones @ Whelans 18th July 2012

It’s been too long since Dave Alvin came to town. A feeling that the audience in Whelans would heartily agree with. Coming after excellent gigs there by JD McPherson and The Dirt Daubers,  it was the third highlight in a two week period which would have made an excellent mini-festival triple bill. Tonight Alvin has his tightest combo in tow, a stripped down but highly efficient trio of drummer of Lisa Pankratz (the guiltiest of the Guilty Women), bassist Brad Fordham and second guitarist Chris Miller, all seasoned Austin-based musicians who deliver a master class on their individual instruments. All pay close attention to Alvin as he leads the band through an exhilerating set. 

He opened with BlackJack Davy and made the first of several dedications to friends who have passed away; in this case for promoter Larry Roddy who had driven Alvin around on his first trip to Ireland. Roddy’s heart was always in the music he  brought rather than in profit. Dave followed this with Hardin County Line that featured in the compelling TV series Justified. He quipped that “you guys couldn’t get tickets for Springsteen then?” making reference to the fact that the Boss was playing a sold out gig in Dublin that night. Throughout the gig Alvin made similar comment and seemed in fine spirits.

The set focused on the current Eleven Eleven album and mortality featured heavily on songs such as Johnny Ace Is Dead about the singer who accidently shot himself in the head on Christmas Day at a gig in Houston, Texas in 1954. He dedicated Black Rose Of Texas to Amy Farris, the violinist who toured with him as part of the Guilty Women band and who committed suicide. He also played Run Conejo Run for his best friend and running mate Chris Gaffney who died in 2008, who had been a part of Alvin’s band as well as a member of the Hacienda Brothers. This emotional song was to conjure up the spirit of his friend and was set to a taut Bo Diddley beat and featured some emotional guitar playing.

 A song played early on was Long White Cadillac, which he noted was recorded by Dwight Yoakam - “that’s how I could afford this hat” he joked referring to the cowboy hat that is now a regular fixture of his stage persona, along with the neckerchief and snap-button shirts he wears onstage. 

Guitar playing is what Dave Alvin is know for and tonight witnesses a stunning display that was never show-off but definitely did show off the talents of a unique and soulful player who is much underrated overall. In The Blasters, he noted, his brother Phil was the singer, the man with the monster voice while his role was to leap around the stage “dancing like a gazelle” with his guitar. While he may not be leaping around the stage too much these days his playing skills  have not diminished.

He has grown into a strong and expressive singer as well as being, from the start, an excellent writer. Alvin closed the show with what he said was “the fourth song he’d ever written down Marie, Marie - previously, he said, all the songs he had composed were in his head. This song, written way back, had found a new meaning for him as the name of the Spanish doctor who had helped keep his brother Phil alive after recent major health problems in Spain. Throughout  Alvin led the band through extended versions of  songs that not only highlighted his undoubted talent, but also those of his current band, allowing each their space to shine. This was particularly notable in an extended drum solos from Pankratz in Dry River. Dave talked about he and brother Phil’s love of the blues and the mentoring and friendship they had with Big Joe Turner, something that was the subject of the song Boss Of The Blues.

For the encore he played a soulful version of Every Night About This Time a song he had written for George Jones. Dave related how he has been preparing to go to the session when he got a call to say “it’s off”. The record label had decided the song was “too country for George Jones”. That’s record labels for you. But it wasn’t too anything other than right for this audience and rounded off an evening that many will remember for a long time to come. A musical tour-de-force? Guilty as charged.

Review by Stephen Rapid, photography by Ronnie Norton

Double JD on the rocks...

JD McPHEARSON AND BAND AND JD WILKES WITH THE DIRT DAUBERS PLAY DUBLIN

JD McPHEARSON @ WHELANS - 12 th JULY 2012

The living, breathing pumping heart of rock 'n' roll could be found in Dublin when JD McPhearson and his band played a blinder in Whelans for a appreciative sold-out crowd. in an 18 song and three encore set they displayed a sense and profound understanding of what makes rock 'n' roll work. It starts in the engine room with the solid foundation of drummer Jason Smay and upright bass player Jimmy Sutton. Sutton is a key component in the line-up as album producer, label owner, singer and musician he is a perfect partner to JD McPhearson. The icing on the cake was the wonderful texture added by saxophonist and occasional keyboard player Doug Cochran and B3 and pianist Ray. Both were integral to the powerful and expressive sound that is a soulful take on the fundamentals of r 'n' b and rock 'n' roll. JD is an expressive and impassioned singer and edgy guitar player who's Telecaster thrusts can only remind of a certain New Jersey singer and guitarist. The bulk of the set is taken from the debut album Signs & Signifiers, which originally was released back in 2010 on Jimmy Sutton's Hi-Style label. In the best way the songs were developed, expanded and energized from their recorded versions. JD opened the show with the words "This is going to be special!". It was. The songs from Jimmy Sutton's favourite song that JD had written A Gentle Awakening to other songs from the album which included Fire Bug, B.G.M.O.S.R.N.R, Dime For Nickles and of course the popular North Side Girl, a song which pretty much everyone in every city can relate to. They expressed delight in being in Dublin and Jimmy told us that many of them had Irish ancestry. He had on his father's side and as his mother was from Peru he declared himself a "mick/spic" hybrid. They also joked that the obviously Asian Ray was Irish too. Aside from JD's songs we were treated to a range of covers that highlighted the band's roots from Chuck Berry's Carol, the Premiers' Farmer John, their favourite Art Neville song as well as one from the pen of Bo Diddley with that vital signature drum beat. They return for a three song encore that finished with a  reggae-fied take on Oil In My Lamp, which JD informed us was in recognition of the Beat, a band that keyboardist Ray had played with for several years. It closed the show in fine style and again displayed the scope that this band are well capable of embracing. The signs were all good.

THE DIRT DAUBERS @ WHELANS 13TH JULY 2012

The Dublin debut of the Dirt Daubers proved again that Col. J. D. Wilkes know how to lead his troops to musical victory. This trio which includes his wife Jessica on banjo, mandolin and vocals and Legendary ShackShakers bassist Mark Robertson - who replaced original bassist 'Slow' Layne Hendrickson - on a set of new and traditional songs. Many came from their latest album album Wake Up Sinners including Wayfaring Stranger, The Devil Gets His Due, Trucks, Tractors and Trains and Single Girl and the set also included some ShackShakers songs like Blood On The Bluegrass from their debut Cockadoodledon't album. For those who might have missed some of the underlying humour that is apparent in the music it is much more obvious in these new/old songs and in the between song patter between the three members themselves and with the audience. Musically the trio make a very full sound built around Robertson's bass rumble, Wilkes' frailing banjo, washboard percussion and always excellent harmonica playing and (a kazoo on the end of a wire!) and Jessica Wilkes strong vocal and instrumental skills. These three are at ease with each other and their music and it shows. They entertain on every level and are called back for an encore which they obliged with and which had the sinners and saints wide awake and looking for more but curfew called.

Special thanks to all at Ubangi Stomps

Reviews by Stephen Rapid and photography by Ronnie Norton


 

Jason Ringerberg @ Whelans 4th July 2012

 

Resplendent in gold cowboy shirt and sparkly hat Jason Ringenberg opened the show with Self-Sabotage recorded with The Scorchers on their Clear Impetuous Morning album. He delivered it with his trademark energy, foot-stompin' and guitar twirls. This was followed in similar fashion with another early Scorchers song Shop It Around. Jason then told us how much he admired the skills required to travel around Ireland on a bus, especially as an American in a cowboy hat, later he told us how an encounter with a stranger nearly came to blows as he walked up to the gig when the aforementioned citizen took offence to him for no apparent reason other than his choice of headgear. Throughout the show Jason regaled us with stories and anecdotes about the songs. He told us about meeting and befriending guitar legend Link Wray before playing the song of that name. Oh Lonesome Prairie was about his upbringing on a hog farm which later led to a tale of the castration of hogs as a young boy on his father's farm. He reiterated his long time love for Ireland and how when he had first visited these shores he took time to drive around the country side on his own. On the road Jason reads a lot and became interested in Irish history and also American history and these two things came together in the song Erin's Seed about the Irish fighting on opposing sides during the battle of Fredericksburg that was written on his visit to the Kilkenny Rhythm & Roots festival  The American Civil War was also the setting for the song Bible And A Gun - a song that he had taken the liberty of revising the lyrics which were originally written with Steve Earle, for that momentous time period. It was also in Kilkenny where he met Hammil On Trial who appeared on the album version of Honky Tonk Maniac From Mars which he delivered with abandon. His inability to keep his guitar in tune was mentioned, "it's my style" he joked, but none of that really matters too much as Jason Ringenberg is a unique talent whether solo or with The Scorchers. He opened the show to requests mid-set and did covers then of Absolutely Sweet Marie, Don't Come Home A Drinkin' (With Loving On Your Mind) and Rainbow Stew as well as his own Rebel Flag In Germany. From the Farmer Jason side of his persona he performed Well Oh Whale (recorded with The Saw Doctors a band he much admires) and The Tractor Goes Chug Chug Chug. He walked off stage and played AP Carter's Lonesome Valley unplugged from the audience before taking the stage to play what he said was his final song, his favourite piece of poetry in the English language which turned out to be his equally demented version of The Ramones I Wanna Be Sedated. He left with a smile on his face as did most of the audience. He had earlier said that he can still rock hard but it just takes longer to recover these days, he also occasionally resorted to lyrics on a music stand as "when you turn 38 you start to lose things" but age has not diminished his love of performance and the feedback he gets in front of a live audience. As his main gig now is as Farmer Jason these solo Jason Ringenberg gigs are special, as indeed this one was.

Review by Steve Rapid and photography by Ronnie Norton

Alejandro Escovedo @ Whelans - 27th June 2012

There's no doubt that Alejandro Escovedo is a trooper, a reformed rock 'n' roll animal, who has battled illness to continue to make the music he so obviously loves. On his last visit to Whelans he was accompanied by his ground-breaking rockin' string quartet, this time out he is joined by the current incarnation of his Sensitive Boys band including a guitarist who's name I didn't quite catch, drummer Chris Searles and bassist Bobby Daniel who has played with Escovedo over the last three albums. The show was centered around the current Tony Visconti produced album Big Station. They opened with Sally Was A Cop, a song that Alejandro explained was about Mexico and the love of community that exists there. Other songs which, for a first time hearing, connected with the largely enthusiastic audience included the album title song plus Man Of The World, This Bed Is Getting Crowded, San Antonio Rain, a song he said was about his birth city while Bottom Of The World was focused on his current home city of Austin, a place he said that for many "doesn't want to change". From Streets Songs Of Love came This Bed Is Getting Crowded with it's powerful chorus of "This ain't love" and later in the set, also from that album, Down In The Bowery, about which he mentioned that all his family were Ramones fans. Castanets with it's chorus of "I love it when she walks away" about an acquaintance who he was less than fond of, who played the titled castenets, but with absolutely no sense of rhythm was taken from the Man Under The Influence album. These songs were delivered with full-on rock raucousness, a fiery sound that culminated in an extended guitar work out on I Wanna be Your Dog. A song that saw Escovedo using a distorted vocal mic and had him prowling the stage with some menace. Throughout Alejandro was in great voice, one that is immediately distinctive, something that was further emphasized when he came back onstage for the solo encore of Last To Know. There were undoubtably some who would have loved to have heard a few more of these earlier, much-loved songs. But with such a strong back catalogue he would have had to have booked a multi-night residency to cover these (he at one point commented that "I've made too many albums"). I don't think that that remark was a sentiment echoed by anyone in the audience. During the evening the singer switched between acoustic and electric guitar as he is very much a part of this band's musical output and the quartet meshed together well as tough well-oiled unit. Alejandro Escovedo has his devoted fans and they love his varied output and are only too pleased to see him in the live context. Even when he was, naturally, concentrating on his newer songs. During the set he talked about family, his parents and siblings as well as his own 7 kids including his 19 year old son who plays drums and synth as a somewhat angry one-man band. Family is key to Escovedo's outlook and the second to last song was a cover, Sabor A Mi by Álvaro Carillo, a song he said he father sang to his mother, anywhere - at the drop of a hat, he sang it in Spanish. Then they finished the evening with an appropriately rough-housed cover of Beast Of Burden during which he got the crowd to sing along with the chorus. After the gig Escovedo came to meet fans. It was that kind of informal and intimate gig.

Review by Steve Rapid, Photography by Ronnie Norton

Hank 3 live @ The Button Factory - June 24th 2012

 

A three hour set was divided, as normally, between Hank 3's "kuntry" and his heavier metal tendencies in the second half of the show. On stage at 7.30 Hank and the band gave their usual hi-energy renditions of a range of songs taken from the last few albums which included Six Pack Of Beer, Life Of Sin, Trooper's Holler, Rebel Within, Country Heroes and Dick In Dixie.With barely a moment to take breath one song ran straight into another, with most delivered at break-neck pace. Since his last visit his band has gone through many changes but this current band can deliver the songs with a large degree of skill and verve. Fundamental to this was the powerhouse drumming of Shaun Williams who was as at ease with the subtle swing of classic country as he was with the more forceful material where his drumming sounded added a depth that sounded like thunder. He was aided in driving the band by upright bassist and backing vocalist Zach Shedd. The music was given it's country textures by the trio of fine players that are David McElfresh on fiddle, Daniel Mason on banjo and long-time band member, producer and upright steel guitarist Andy Gibson. Gibson is a sonic showman adept at playing old school steel, as on the cover version on Hank 3 grandfather's ("the hillbilly Shakespeare") I'll Never Get Out OF This World Alive to delivering the atmospherics of some the more recent material. The focus of the show though is undoubtably Hank 3 and although he says little between songs other than short summations of the songs themes they played. He communicates through the music and his overall stance. He is dressed in his usual multi-patched trousers, cowboy boots, customized waistcoat and cowboy hat and commands the respect of the mixed audience. There are the older obvious country fans, metal heads and all points in between. Lots of devil hand salutes abound from the front rows. Everyone seemed to be enjoying the first hour and a half though once the lights went down and the stage was left to Hank and drummer Williams there tended to be a polarization of opinion. Some loved all parts of the show but others found the second section of the show a step too far and retired gracefully. But fair play to Hank 3, he does his own thing and gives it his all in his three hour set and no one should feel short changed. Hank 3 has created a sub-genre and plays with obvious passion and commitment for his fans and so deserves all the credit that comes his way. Still a rebel within and a rebel without.

 

Live photographs by Steve Rapid

 

Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers live @ the 02 June 7th 2012

A packed O2 Theatre welcomed Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers with a great cheer as the band launched straight into Listen To Her Heart. The excitment spread through those standing on the ground level, as well as to those seated in the balconies. All were treated to what amounted to a greatest hits set along with a couple of tracks from their current Mojo album and the odd surprise. The main one being a full-on version of Fleetwood Mac's Peter Green's Oh Well, done to perfection with the heavy riff well to the fore.The Traveling Wilbury's Handle With Care was another welcome choice. The amount of guitars on display was dizzying Mike Campbell didn't use the same guitar twice until eight songs into the set, and they even did one with matching Gibson Firebirds! By the third number in the crowd were singing along with songs like Don't Back Down. Here Comes My Girl, Yer So Bad, Learning To Fly, Runnin' Down A Dream and others all went over well. Petty told the audience that it had been too long since the band's last visit and how happy he was to be in Dublin. He mentioned that the previous day, while walking around, he had met some Spamish fans which led the crowd to burst into a sponteneous sing along of Ole, Ole, Ole which seemed to baffle, not understandably, both Petty and Campbell. So after a moment of confusion it was "back to the show" and they carried on with Free Falling and a extended guitar workout on It's Good To Be King with Petty, Campbell and Scott Thurston all on guitars. There were also slower songs, like Something Good Coming, that featured both Petty and Campbell on acoustic guitars. There was a balance between the hard and heavy, the immediatly catchy chart hits and the slower acoustic songs that all worked well. That the core of this band has been together for thirty years shows in the ease and skill that they deliver these songs. The rhythm section of the man Petty called "my favourite drummer" and like "standing in front of a freight train" Steve Ferrone and bassist Ron Blair anchored and drove the sound. While Thurston added guitar, harmonica, keyboards and harmony vocals. Heartbreaker mainstay Benmount Tench was a keyboard master who added colour and depth to the sound. Mike Campbell again reaffirmed his outstanding talent as lead guitarist. These guys didn't seem to be going through the motions and they were enjoying themselves and fed off the audience's response which was with them from the word go. It was a wide-ranging age group, though it weighed heavily toward the 40plus end of the spectrum. They called the band back for an encore of Mary Jane's Last Dance, and American Girl and then everyone went home on a high note.

Review and above stage-screen photo by Stephen Rapid

 

Johanna Divine live@Odessa Club - Fri 18th May

 

Making her second appearance in Dublin, she previously supported her friend Sarah Savoy, Johanna Divine proves herself, again, an entertaining performer. She is accompanied on this occasion by electric guitarist Mo O'Connor, a talented player, though the lack of rehearsal time is apparent during the gig as there is a slight out-of-sync feel on occasion. However that doesn't take away from the general feel and the attraction of Ms Divine's voice. She shows her knowledge of roots genre when she mixes some classic cover songs such as Junior Parker's Mystery Train, Elizabeth Cotton's Freight Train, Woody Guthrie's Do Re Mi and the Bob Wills recorded Blues For Dixie.This is a good way to get an understanding audience on your side and shows Divine can handle these disparate songs well as she also does with the varied moods of her own material which again underlines her skill as a vocalist. She accompanied herself on her electrified Gibson, along with O'Connor's electric guitars, on material from her debut Mile-High Rodeo and her forthcoming album Electric Tide. These included Lone Ranger, Lulu Saint Maire - relating to the song she told us that in her home town people dance and drink a lot, but here in the Odessa Club there was a portion of the latter but non of the former. She took a break and was joined then for the show's close by members of Prison Love on full on versions of her song Beelinin' and for a spirited, shared vocal rendition of I Saw The Light. Prison Love who opened the evening have been working as a five piece band for some time and their blend of cajun, bluegrass and old-time music is a crowd pleaser. Although the set consists of covers they are well chosen and include songs recorded by Iry LeJeune, Flatt and Scruggs. Rock Island Line,  popularized by Leadbelly was typical and showed that these boys enjoy what they do, but they may need to add some original songs to progress further. Overall an enjoyable evening that arguers well for future appearances.

Review by Stephen Rapid. Photographs by Ronnie Norton

Woody Pines @ The Seamus Ennis Centre, Naul - 27th April 2012

 

On a cold Saturday night the quartet played the welcoming ambience of the Seamus Ennis Centre, their first visit to the venue as part of an extensive European but short Irish tour. They exuded both musical skill and a good humour that went down well with an audience who were equally new to the band's charms, but both sides of the stage had some fun and called the band back for an encore at the end of the show. Leader Woody Pines led the band with powerful lead vocals and resonator and electric arch-top guitar. He is joined by long-time companion Zack Pozebanchuk on doghouse bass, Mike Gray on the very effective rhythms with thimbled fingers that he drew from his neck-hung washboard as well as some telling banjo playing. The final weapon in their armoury is guitarist and clarinettist Lyon Graulty. This current line-up is the one that recorded the e.p. You Gotta Roll from which, along with their previous album Counting Alligators, they drew a selection of the songs featured in their two part set as well as earlier songs and other covers. Both recordings get the general ambience of what the band offer which they themselves describe as "viper jazz, ragtime and country blues". The main difference between their rewarding recordings is the spontaneity they have live where Graulty's distinctive clarinet is more of a feature which immediately links their sound to an earlier era and adds that jazzier emphasis. Something that has always been a part of their overall sound but is further highlighted by Graulty's contribution. He is also a interesting and arresting electric guitarist who uses a selection of self-made pedals that enhance his sound which covers some Travis County picking, lap steel-styled slide guitar, organ sounds and rockin' blues riffs. This band line-up's next recorded outing should be special. Their live set draws from new and traditional songs such as Satisfied, Rich Gal, Poor Gal for the latter which sit easily alongside Pines originals like Crazy-Eyed Woman and Counting Alligators. Between songs Pines connected with the audience with his introductions and explanations of the band's lifestyle and song choices. A hard working band he recounted that they spend a lot of time driving to gigs and on the road, doing 248 dates last year. They are road warriors and that shows in the tightness of the band. A cover of Hank Williams' Ramblin' Man reflects this ongoing traveling and their love of the music from earlier eras. A part of this is the fact that they travel so much is that they listen to a lot of radio. Pines relates of hearing a particular song that struck, they had tried to catch the chords but didn't quite get them or hear the song title so they ended up writing a song of their own based on the part-heard song. At the end of the show they got the audience to sing-along to the refrains of "I'll see you in the morning if I live, I'll see you in the morning I don't get killed". The audience singing out the last part of the line after the band had sung the aforementioned lines. It ended the show on a high and Woody Pines, the band and the singer, had made a lot of new friends.

Live review by Stephen Rapid. Photograph by Ronnie Norton

 

CMA songwriters session@ Whelans - 23rd Feb. 2012

The CMA (Country Music Assocation) was back to Dublin for another of its outreach events. In the past they have brought in (then) upcoming acts like Jace Everett, Julie Roberts and Dierks Bentley as well as holding their AGM meeting in Dublin in 1995. This time out it was a trio of songwriters, Bill Anderson, Clint Black and Bob DiPiero, who were here to play some of the many songs they had written and to expand on them with stories about how they were written or about their own lives and times. This was as much about the repartee as it was about the music. To some it was an odd paring in that both DiPiero and Bill Anderson are predominantly songwriters although Anderson has had a lengthy career as an recording artist in his own right. Clint Black, who emerged at the same time as Garth Brooks and Alan Jackson, has not released an album of new material in some time and is not really known as a writer for other artists. But in the end the balance worked and the audience were enthralled.

Black arrived on stage a little later than the others as he had picked up a flu virus along the way and was trying to give his voice as much chance to recover as possible. This gave him time to show his skills as a guitarist and harmonica player. He impressed on both and played on songs by both the other participants. Anderson commented that "my guitar doesn't have all the notes on it that yours does" in recognition of his dexterity. He was particularly poignant on harmonica on a couple of Anderson's classic country songs. Anderson was indeed the most obviously "classic country" of the trio and he played a selection of songs from his "deep" catalogue. These ranged from Five Little Fingers, a song that was a hit here in Ireland by Frankie McBride, from his early years through to Whiskey Lullaby, a CMA song of the year in 2005, though it was written years earlier by Anderson and Jon Randall, it was eventually recorded as a duet by Brad Paisley and Alison Krauss. DiPiero acted as MC and called on the other two sing or to tell a particular story. They took it it in turns to deliver the songs and tell tales and, as is befitting a veteran artist we are unlikely to see playing live again Bill Anderson was granted a couple of extra choices. DiPiero told us that Bob Dylan had been asked in the documentary Don't Look Back which songwriter he most respected and he had named Bill Anderson. That's some respect.

For a man in his 75th year Bill Anderson has an uncanny memory of his songs and lyrics and has a gentle humour and is still in good enough voice to give life to his songs. These included Po' Folks, Still and the Ken Dodd covered Happiness and a song he opened his selection with titled The Songwriters which pretty much summed up the vocation with humour and insight. Anderson told us about touring in Ireland back in the day with Loretta Lynn and he remembered the review he had received from one disgruntled critic who was non-too-partial to his mid-song recitations. The reference to their sentimentality he said had the effect of tour mate Conway Twitty referring to him as "Hallmark" for the rest of the tour. Another story he told was of a couple who were watching television in bed and the husband had the controller and was constantly flicking channels between and x-rated show and a fishing channel. This exasperated his wife who told him to "stick with one channel or other". "Which one" the husband said, to which his wife replied the x-rated one as "you already know how to fish"! He played us a more contemporary song called Give It Away that he had written with Buddy Cannon and Jamie Johnson that was build around an explanation of the title that Johnson had said was a drawn from the experience of going through a divorce. At a later award ceremony Johnson had thanked his wife for divorcing as he had gotten this song from it.

Bob DiPiero's songs have been covered by a wide range of country artists but in person he delivers them more in rockin' acoustic mode. His first cut was by, then newcomer, Reba McIntire. He explained how when he got the cheque he went out and spent it only to realize after that he had not kept anything back for tax. Writing about theis experience gave him the song American Made, which was covered by The Oak Ridge Boys, and also the title of his current solo album. He also told how the experience of watching Forrest Gump had inspired him to write Blue Clear Sky and hiw he had to defend it's title with the artist who recorded it, George Strait, from changing it to Clear Blue Sky. He stuck to his guns and it stuck to the top of the charts. 

Clint Black, had a more caustic wit that he aimed at his fellow artists and the audience on occasion. He told us how his song Code Of The West was inspired by those in uniform who put themselves in harm's way, such as those in the military or the fire service. Black told us he was raised a Catholic and his middle name was Patrick and how, as a kid, he had kept snakes but had lost a poisoned one in the house but it had turned up, dead, in the washing machine. He got a great response from the audience for his 1989 hit A Better Man, his first single. Black had been requested, via Facebook, to play the song A Bad Goodbye. This he put off till later in the show when he felt his voice was warmed up enough to tackle it. He told us how he had got Wynonna Judd to sing on the recorded version but tonight maybe Bob would fill in. Bob declined to, so he started to sing it solo when the lady who had requested it was heard singing along in the audience. Her name we discovered was Michelle and he brought her up on stage where she, despite her nervousness, delivered it well and it was one of the evening's magic moments. 

The evening closed with the trio delivering a rousing version of Will The Circle Be Unbroken with the entire audience singing along and a standing ovation for three individualistic personalities who showed some insight into their skills as songwriters and singers as well as communicators. It was a master class in how the art of good songwriting can cross boundaries and decades to connect with a sympathetic audience.

Review by Stephen Rapid. Photograph by Ronnie Norton

TransAtlantic Sessions @ National Concert Hall Tues 7 Feb 2012

 

While it might have seemed an unusual venue for the Celtic Connections crowd the Concert Hall worked just fine as the musicians transformed it from a formal setting into a casual evening with music from a bunch of companions who all happen to be superb musicians. There were (I’m pretty sure) 16 musicians with 7 featured singers. I won’t attempt to list each number but will pick out my personal highlights.

The band opened with a fast tune – unannounced, but sizzling, which left everyone eager for more – and they were followed by Tim O’Brien who was, as always a delight. Ruth Moody of the Wailin’ Jennys beautifully sang Nest from her album and a Jennys tune, Asleep at Least switching neatly from guitar to banjo. Eddi Reader was a crowd delight with her perfect voice; she started with a Burns song before singing Declan O’Rourke’s Love is the Way and introducing Declan himself who received a rousing reception, as a home-town boy should before he went into Galileo.

Aly Bain led the amazing ‘band’ - although it is almost silly to count musicians of their calibre as merely band members – through a set of tunes before turning the stage over to the great Karen Matheson who triumphed with Si Kahn’s Aragon Mill which Karen noted she had learned from Andy Irvine.

The extraordinary Raul Malo came next and his two songs here were, for me, the highpoint of the night. He opened with JD Souther’s You’re Only Lonely making me feel that JD had written it for Raul and then blew me away with a version of Every Little Thing about You. Raul Malo’s voice over Jerry Douglas’ lap steel and the astonishing Michael McGoldrick’s uillean pipes was a perfect experience for me in what was a powerful night of music. Tim O’Brien wrapped up the first half with a singalong version of Woody Guthrie’s This Land is Your Land to honour Guthrie’s centenary.

Eavesdropping at the interval I heard that some thought last year was better, some thought this year was much better. And someone else was…bored. Bored?! Please.

The second half started with a rippling Jerry Douglas resonator solo followed by Bruce Molsky’s 2 lovely old time songs – I only wish I could have worked up the nerve to introduce myself to him – followed by Raul crooning, as only he can, Around the World, the theme to Around the World in 80 Days a choice that puzzled many. Perhaps it was the mention of County Down? All the singers came out again, we had guitar wizard Russ Barenburg’s jazzy Hallowe’en Rehearsal which featured all the musicians . Phil Cunningham, who had only joined the tour the night before, gave us a lovely, wistful Cajun flavoured Lake Charles Waltz just before Karen Matheson again triumphed with Diamond Ring.  The band then ripped into Frankie/The Crossing before the encore when Paul Brady and Ciaran Tourish joined the multitude for a Raul Malo led romp through Hank Williams’ classic Hey, Good Lookin.

It was a great evening for music and it is hard to convey how  amazing musicians were throughout. Guitarist John Doyle was both rocksteady and imaginative, a hard combination he carried off superbly. The fiddlers – Aly Bain and John McCusker, occasionally joined by Tim O’Brien and Bruce Molsky – were both sweet and tough. Danny Thompson on bass was, as expected, magisterial and perfect. Tim O’Brien, Russ Barenberg and Bruce Molsky played (I think) 5 or 6 different instruments amongst themselves switching around without a care. Phil Cunningham switched between accordion and piano with Donald Shaw and drummer James Mackintosh was a subtle yet constant and necessary  presence.

I thought it was a night of exceptional music and also great fun. Bring on next year

Thanks to Denis Finnegan for the set list.

 Review by Sandy Harsch. Photography by Ronnie Norton

Lindi Ortega @ The Sugar Club - Saturday 4th Feb. 2010

 

With Zoe Muth playing close by it was a toss-up to decide on which artist to see but on balance we chose to go and see Linda Ortega who had her full band The Wild Wranglers with her. It was the right choice (for us) as it was a great evening with Ortega a force of nature delivering a powerful set that should see her reputation and audience growing in the future. Greeting us with a "It's great to be back" she launched into her first song Angels, one of several songs from her enticing debut album Little Red Boots. Each song was introduced by a short incisive explanation. For instance Lindi told us that I'm No Elvis Presley was written after she did a industry showcase in L.A. and one of the 'men in suits' had contacted her manager to say while she was good she would never be "legendary". Hence the song. And while Lindi Ortega may never achieve "legendary" status she is going to find a lot of devoted fans. Other songs from the album included Black Fly, Little Lie, When All The Stars Align, a stunning Bluebird and heartbreaking Dying Of Another Broken Heart. Heartbreak was a continuing theme through her songs. She told us she had recently brought a crystal on a necklace that was going to bring her some true love.

She played several new songs including one which she said was a public service announcement, its theme was don't use drugs, "use me". Another song In My Backyard was about burying a former lover in that particular location. "Just don't break my heart, boys" she warned us. The band throughout were excellent and had apparently only met for a rehearsal the day before, as although they had individually all played with her before this was their first gig together with this line-up. Double bassist Travis Vance and drummer Tristen Henderson laid down a solid rhythmic foundation, while keyboard player and backing vocalist Sarah Silva (an artist in her own right) filled out the sound. Special mention must go to guitarist James Robertson whose Telecaster playing was precise, twang-filled and fun. His slide playing on the closing Fall Down Or Fly was worthy of Sonny Landreth.

There were two covers of Johnny Cash songs - Folsom Prison Blues and Delia, the latter played solo and she revealed herself to be an accomplished guitarist as well as a stunning vocalist. Live the Dolly Parton comparison was more pronounced, though I don't think Parton has ever delivered her songs with such force and ferocity. Her fifteen song set had the enthusiastic audience totally with her and ensured that when she returns so will these fans. She promised a new album later this year and this Irish-Mexican (the Irish Lindi said was on "the mammy's side") songbird will be back. Can't wait.

Review by Stephen Rapid. Photograph by Ronnie Norton

 

 

Secret Sisters@ The Sugar Club, Dublin - Tues 24th Jan 2012

 

Sisters Laura and Lydia Rogers are no longer a secret judging by the sell-out audience in the Sugar Club on a Tuesday night. The siblings went straight into their first song of a 17 song set and it was obvious that they have a growing confidence and a more astute awareness of an audience. Tonight the fifties-style dresses were replaced by jeans with black tops but the between song banter was very much a part of the act, as are the asides about having to share so much time together and the minor conflict that ensues from that. Laura how happy they were to be back in Dublin.

Laura said that because of the song Tennessee Me many people believed that they were from there rather than from Muscle Shoals, Alabama. Their home state was the subject of one of a number of self-written songs due to be included on their next album that they previewed in the show. The songs included King Cotton, the aforementioned Alabama tribute, Bad Habit, River Jordan, Little Again and a song written and sung by Laura that was a direct reaction to weather disasters in their home state. That song Tomorrow Will Be Kinder was  one of the evening’s highlights. They of course included a lot of covers, songs that they loved and heard growing up and singing on their front porch. Songs their father loved like Why Baby Why (a song  they stopped in the middle due to a distorted guitar and then faultlessly resumed once it was fixed), Am I That Easy To Forget, Your Cheatin’ Heart as well as a song that Laura had convinced Lydia to sing onstage, it was one of a number of songs that they often sang offstage. You Send Me worked well and got a great reaction - however she said that another song they occasionally did for themselves Careless Whisper would remain that way. They also did Do You Love An Apple? and revealed that when they started singing it neither they nor their father knew what “bugger all” meant. They do now. A highlight for this listener was the Everly Brothers (who they said they have often been compared to) Devoted To You.

As expected the harmonies throughout were sublime and the simple guitar accompaniment, shared by both sisters was effective. I do feel that in the future, after the release of the new album, a couple of additional players, double bass and lap steel perhaps?, would add that extra dimension. But it was a great night that showed that music in its most basic form of voice and guitar (and little light-hearted dialogue) can captivate an audience. The sisters have grown and learned from the large amount of touring they have done and their new album should take them to another level.

Review by Stephen Rapid. Photography by Ronnie Norton

Sarah Savoy and the Francadians @ Whelans, Dublin - Sat 21st Jan 2012

Cajun came to Camden Street in the formidable shape of Sarah Savoy and the Francadians - a quartet of David Rolland on accordion, Manolo Gonzales on upright bass, Vincent Blin on fiddle and the larger than life Sarah Savoy on vocals and guitar. Savoy is the obvious leader and focal point of the band (and from an illustrious family steeped in the cajun traditions and music) but this is a fully integrated band not a backing group and vocalist. Something that was highlighted in the opening song Little Bitty Girl that played with double entendres and ended with the line that “we all play together”. This was one of the few songs delivered in English but that didn’t in any way affect the overall enjoyment of the evening as French is the natural language of cajun and at least half the band are native Frenchmen. This was their first time to play Dublin although they had been in the city before. Many of the songs they featured in tonight’s set were taken from their current Allons Rock ‘n’ Roll album. It takes a mix of classic country songs and one original all delivered in smokey French. For instance the Tex Williams, Merle Travis song Smoke, Smoke, Smoke That Cigarette is now Fume, Fume, Fume. Johnny Can’t Dance and Folsom Prison Blues were two others, the latter got an especially warm response. Savoy who was dealing with a shot voice due to a series of gigs and some bad PAs had to drop the keys of some songs in order to be able to sing them. However her natural exuberance carried her through and won the day. David Rolland took the lead on some songs too and provided a nice balance between the two. It was one of those gigs where both sides of the stage seemed to be enjoying the evening which ran to two sets and ended with the curfew. Throughout Savoy translated the essence of the songs and had an entertaining and funny stream of between song banter. Telling us that “there are blondes, brunettes and girls whose hair is so dark that even the devil don’t want them!” ... Savoy has jet black hair. She has an expressive face that makes her a natural on stage and has a band that are equally adept at what they do. She confided that all have very different tastes and agreeing on what to play in the van is difficult and usually comes down to some classic George Jones, something that they can all agree on. She also told us that cajun music is a very masculine music and so she had written High-Heel Two-Step to help redress the balance. The subject of many of the other songs though revolved around the consumption of alcohol and its subsequent results. Although space didn’t allow it and it only briefly broke out for the last song this is music made for dancing and the whole audience was caught up in its infectious rhythms. They said that they wanted to move to Dublin but true or not they would be welcome back anytime.

Review by Stephen Rapid. Photograph by Ronnie Norton

Glen Campbell @ The Convention Centre Dublin - Nov.19th 2011

 

Glen Campbell paid a farewell visit to his Irish fans with an a near capacity house at Dublin’s Convention Centre. Supported by his family based band Instant People he gave an almost flawless performance marred and jarred only by the loss of stage lighting about a third of the way into his show and then a constant trickle of totally inconsiderate well-wishers at stage front looking for handshakes, abusing the star’s generosity and good manners, and freaking out most of the rest of the audience. For once I wished for a tighter and more diligent house crew.

The show itself was a credit to all concerned and with Glen’s acknowledged medical condition on everybody’s radar, there was always the possibility of an embarrassing glitch. But under the watchful eyes of mother hen and 35 year veteran musical director T. J. Kuenster and his three children Cal, Shannon and Ashley, that was never allowed to happen. One little guitar fluff in Wichita Lineman was quickly glossed over by the excellent twin lead guitar work of Shannon who shows every sign of becoming a major star in his own right way into the future. 

From the start, all the favourite songs were there, By the Time I Get To Phoenix, Where’s the Playground Suzy, Only Make Believe and Rhinestone Cowboy, all drawing huge audience response. They were interspersed with songs from the excellent current album Ghost On The Canvas, especially one called It’s Your Amazing Grace with daughter Ashley. Ashley is also a fine banjo player and together they hit my nostalgia bone with a reprise of the highlight of my first Glen Campbell concert in Dublin’s Carlton Cinema when supported by Anne Murray, Glen had there introduced the world to banjo maestro and future mega producer Carl Jackson with a stunning Dueling Banjos.

The highlights of the evening for me were a powerful rendering of Jimmy Webb’s The Moon’s A Harsh Mistress and a mini guitar marathon on the break in Galveston. Glen’s poignant visit to A Better Place brought a few tears to his enthralled audience. All in all a very enjoyable farewell concert from one of Americana music’s icons who in his career crossed all the boundaries from bluegrass to country and West Coast to standards and leaves us with no regrets and a shed load of great memories.

On Saturday night Glen Campbell kicked alzheimer’s ass, played guitar like a demon, and lost not one fan in the process. May he have a peaceful journey as he faces the one medical spectre that we all dread, in the company of friends, family and legions of devoted fans. 

Review and Photograph by Ronnie Norton

Gillian Welch @ The Grand Canal Theatre, 17th Nov. 2011

Was the Gillian Welch concert one of the gigs of a lifetime? Yes. As a fellow audience member said ‘it was as close to perfect as is possible.’ It was an eager audience – tickets had been sold out for ages. After listening to Gillian’s own mix CD Gil and David came onstage at about 8:15 with Gil in her trademark dress and cowboy boots (a look later nicked by – of all people – Taylor Swift) and David in his neat grey suit and a face-concealing Stetson hat he got from James Monroe, Mr Bill Monroe’s son.

They went back to the very first album, Revival, to start the night with Gil’s Tear My Stillhouse Down and the great contrast of Gillian’s rock-solid flat top guitar rythmn playing against David’s intricate picking on his arch-top Epiphone is as characteristic and gorgeous as it always has been. In two 50 minute sets, plus 5 encores they played most of the new album The Harrow and the Harvest and songs from each of the other albums with particularly strong versions of Elvis Presley Blues, Revelator, No One Knows My Name, the still chilling Caleb Meyer and Look at Miss Ohio.

Their version of Six White Horses from the new album was a particular delight with David playing banjo and harmonica while Gil hamboned (used her body as and hands as a percussion instrument) and clog-danced, wryly commenting afterwards that she had intended to learn a fancy new clog-step ahead of the tour, but that ‘it just hadn’t happened’.

The encores raised the evening even higher – which I’d doubted was possible – with cover versions of O Brother’s I’ll Fly Away followed by the Johnny Cash/June Carter stalwart Jackson but culminating in an extraordinary choice, gorgeously played, of Jefferson Airplane’s White Rabbit. It was incongruous and absolutely…perfect.

While Gillian switched between guitar and banjo – and occasionally added harmonica – Dave stayed with his guitar excepting Six White Horses. His playing, particulary in his solos, continues to astound; I sometimes feel he gets himself into beautiful places that it will be impossible to get out of, but each time he resolves the solo and amazes his listeners. They are two halves whose sum really is greater than its parts. Gil’s singing apart from David, as in O Brother, is wonderful and his playing on his solo album and other projects is great, but I feel that they achieve an energy working together that is unique and unsurpassable – and we in the audience were blown away by it in the Grand Canal Theatre last Thursday. What a night!

Review by Sandy Harsch, Photograph by Ronnie Norton

Steve Earle@The Olympia Theatre Dublin - 6th Nov 2011

Review by Stephen Rapid, Photograph by Ronnie Norton


Bringing the Dukes (and the Duchesses) with him for the first time in an age Steve Earle delivered a two part set that was an appropriate mix of old favourites and new songs from his extensive reportaire. It featured various vocal turns from the band as well as from Earle who's own distinctive and forceful vocals were as powerful as ever. A prompt 8pm start (" Sometimes we are are own support band") was followed, as usual, by a set of back to back songs before Earle spoke to the audience and began his first introductions to the band. The songs in this part of the set included some songs from his MCA days - Hillbilly Highway, My Old Friend The Blues and Someday as well as songs from his latest album. He then introduced his wife Alison Moorer, who had up to this point been playing keyboards. They sang a duet Days Aren't Long Enough after which Moorer sang solo, including a version of Sam Cooke's A Change Is Gonna Come and again proved what a fine vocalist she is, and has always been. The band switched instruments throughout the show with Moorer playing accordion, acoustic and electric guitars. Guitarist Chris Masterson, something of a revelation, played pedal steel, mandolin as well as a variety of six and twelve string guitars and also sang harmony. He is a member of The Mastersons along with partner Eleanor Whitmore who tonight played fiddle, mandolin and guitar, as well as backing vocals. Both were versatile, adaptable and essential parts of the band's sound adding the twang factor when neccessry. The rhythm section was completed by Will Rigby on drums and the only surviving member of previous Dukes line-ups long time bassist Kelley Looney, who also took a turn at the microphone to sing Free Men. In his between song introductions and explanations Earle referenced the Occupy Wall Street campaign and it's Irish offshoots. Indeed the bass drum carried a "We are the 99%" sign. He also prefaced The Devil's Right Hand by telling a tale of how he used to keep a loaded pistol around the house until his son Justin misappropriated it and the lengths which followed to find out where it was. He further talked about the American Civil War and how there were 58,000 casualties at Gettysburg and how even today "the people who start these wars aren't fucking going" before playing Dixieland. This was followed by a rousing Galway Girl and a more acoustic version of The Mountain. Meet Me in the Alleyway had an rough-edged dirty blues sound with Earle playing harmonica and sing through a distorted mic. Another duet from Earle and Moorer, Heaven and Hell was from the current album I'll Never Get out Of This World Alive. Another small point that yet again Earle and band had no onstage mointors. The enthusiastic and invigorated audience demanded and got two encores which included a new song written for Treme, the TV series set in New Orleans that Earle has starred in as well as Taneytown, Johnny Comes Marching Home and Copperhead Road. Steve Earle is a captivating performer in any form but with the Dukes (and Duchess) it encapsulates his career in a better way than any other. This show was up there with the best I've seen him do and after the show they band met fans in the lobby to meet and greet and sign, which was an added bonus for hardcore fans

Eilen Jewell @ Sugar Club, Dublin - 3rd Nov 2011

Queen Jewell told us how excited she was to finally play a date in Dublin, something she had wanted to do, it was she enthused "a magical event". Her previous visits were only to Dublin Airport on the way to other venues. The audience in the Sugar Club were equally delighted to have her and her superb band there. The rhythm section of Jason Beek on drums and backing vocals and Johnny Sciascia on upright bass were solid and sympathetic to the songs throughout, laying down a solid musical bedrock. Because of his role in the music guitarist Jerry Miller gets a lot of attention, and deservedly so, he is an dexterous and dynamic player. This is a band as Jewell says that are "capable of playing anything" and that is proved as the music then touches on classic country, rockabilly, blues and honky-tonk. This tightly focused outfit played songs from all of their albums including a couple of songs from the gospel side project the Sacred Shakers. The 22 song set included two songs from her Loretta Lynn tribute album- Fist City and Deep As Your Pocket - the latter song described as a public service warning. Her relaxed introductions including telling us that cupid wasn't all he was cracked up to be with his scattered aim as outlined in her song Bang Bang Bang, that Jameson is their favourite whiskey before playing High Shelf Booze. That the first song she learned was a blues song that they had adapted their take from previous versions as Nobody's Business. Other covers outside of Miss Lynn's still relevant songs included Arthur Alexander's The Girl That Radiates That Charm, Bob Dylan's Trouble In Mind and the Miller showcase, the Johnny Kidd and the Pirates classic, Shakin' All Over which saw Miller include a slew of riffs from 60's songs like Paint It Black into the mix and the audience singing the chorus. Her own songs are every bit as good and included Sea Of Tears, Boundary County, Santa Fe, Warning Signs and Heartache Boulevard. Eilen Jewell is far more than just a queen of the minor key, the music played before an audience by this tight and thoroughly engaged and engaging quartet is an ideal live experience. They breathe new life into these songs in this setting. Both sides of the stage had fun, which is exactly how it should be.

Review by Stephen Rapid, Photograph by Mark Averill